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Book Cover for: Democracy Lives in Darkness: How and Why People Keep Their Politics a Secret, Emily Van Duyn

Democracy Lives in Darkness: How and Why People Keep Their Politics a Secret

Emily Van Duyn

Republicans and Democrats increasingly distrust, avoid, and wish harm upon those from the opposing party. They also increasingly reside among like-minded individuals and belong to social groups that share their political beliefs. While these factors can make it difficult to express a
dissenting political opinion, digital and social media have given people new spaces for political discourse and community, and more control over who knows--and does not know--their political beliefs.

In Democracy Lives in Darkness, Emily Van Duyn looks at how these changes in the political and media landscape affect democracy. Van Duyn discovers and follows a secret political organization of progressive women in a conservative community in rural Texas. Its members, a mixture of real estate
agents, school teachers, business owners, and retired grandmothers, met in secret to protect themselves from social, economic, and even physical retaliation by their conservative neighbors, friends, and family. They discussed immigrant rights, women's reproductive rights, racism, and intolerance of
those of different racial/ethnic and cultural backgrounds in their community. Democracy Lives in Darkness is about this group: their daily lives, their choices, and ultimately, their incubation. But it is also about what led them to meet in secret--the political prejudice and hostility that
marginalizes and makes people afraid, and the growing political, social, and geographic cleavages that now make even mainstream dissent dangerous.

Importantly, Van Duyn asks why mainstream partisans feel the need to hide their political beliefs from others, why they feel afraid of those from the opposite party, how they stay politically engaged in secret, and how this can transform them and their communities. The book challenges those who
study democratic life to look beyond public political behavior and those who study big data and machine learning to consider the unique and meaningful qualities of studying the individual in context. Van Duyn challenges the assumption that the United States is a liberal democracy where ideas can be
expressed freely and publicly. Rather, she suggests that democracy in the United States may exist in darkness, but, more optimistically, that it uses this darkness to move forward.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
  • Publish Date: Oct 8th, 2021
  • Pages: 288
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.30in - 6.20in - 0.70in - 0.90lb
  • EAN: 9780197557020
  • Categories: GeneralJournalismAnthropology - Cultural & Social

About the Author

Emily Van Duyn is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Her research explores why people talk (or do not talk) about politics and the role of digital media in facilitating a space for community and political discourse. She tackles these questions using diverse methodologies, including surveys, experiments, interviews, and ethnography.

Praise for this book

"Democracy Lives in Darkness is an insightful, original, and deeply important work of scholarship. Van Duyn dives much deeper than the headlines and the hashtags, demonstrating the ways that a polarized, digitally-mediated political landscape has altered classical forms of political participatory behavior. This is a book that sticks with you, and changes how you think about the Internet and political communities." -- Dave Karpf, George Washington University

"This book will change the way we think about and measure political activism and partisanship. Van Duyn skillfully brings the reader inside a secret political organization--one acting on behalf of one of the two national political parties. These Democratic women cannot be Democrats in public due to their social and political context. Here, Van Duyn carefully demonstrates why the traditional observational measures of political participation miss the crucial social and political context that affect whether a person is willing or capable of admitting to their own political activity. This book uncovers a hidden world of political behavior, using robust qualitative analyses as well as survey research. Van Duyn has laid out a robust and revealing picture of American political action that will surely inspire new questions and approaches to the study of political activism and partisan behavior long into the future." -- Lilliana Mason, University of Maryland, College Park